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Hi everyone,
I have a quick question. I am new to art fests and was wondering the etiquette on displaying women's breasts in a painting. It will be very tasteful, such as in the victorian nude attached. She will be nude from the waist up, and will be depicted as a mermaid. I hate to have to cover her by adding long hair, but if I must, then I must. THANK YOU for your input:) P.S. I have checked the rules and regulations of the art fests, and did not see anything relating to nudes. It is the Columbus Arts Fest and Ann Arbor Street Art Fair.


Established in 1993, Artsfest is an annual juried arts festival held at Annmarie Sculpture Garden & Arts Center located in Solomons, Maryland, about an hour from the Baltimore-Washington metro area.
Prospectus: http://www.annmariegarden.org/annmarie2/node/112
Downtown Naples Festival of the Arts took place on March 21-22 on a six block stretch of 5th Avenue in downtown Naples, Florida. I participated in this show a few years ago and did not do well, but I applied to this year as a backup for Winter Park, which ran on the same weekend this year. I was on the wait list for Winter Park and did not get an invitation, so Marcia and I showed up at 5:30 am for the dreaded early morning setup on Saturday morning. Some artists don't mind that early morning setup, but I hate them. It typically takes us 4 hours to set up and, being in our 60s, we are pretty tired by the time all the artwork is up. Then, its a 10-6pm art fair in hot weather.
Besides the early morning setup, new chairman Jody Agastos has a serious parking problem to contend with in this art fair. The big grassy field north and east of the art fair that has traditionally been for artist parking, is now being developed and is no longer available.
To compensate, the committee secured artist parking two miles away and provided shuttles for the artists. Jody also found a parking lot of the Women's Club just 1/2 block from 5th Avenue at Park Street. 40 spots were available on a first come first served basis for an additional $50. for the weekend if paid in advance. Marcia and I jumped at the closer parking and paid the $50 and were awarded the #34 spot. Of course, when we got there we found that our booth was way west on 5th avenue so our "close" parking was still five blocks away. Better than two miles, but still, pretty far.
On Sunday morning when we arrived to park in the Women's Club lot we discovered that the Women's Club was having an event that morning and all the parking spaces were taken by members. Jody was there trying her best to manage the situation (she was blind-sided by this unexpected event), and she graciously directed us to a temporary spot until the event ended and the Women left. We came back later to re park in more convenient spot.
Anyway, I don't think any artists were pleased with the parking situation. And, it seems to me that most of the Naples art fairs will have similar parking problems next year. I hope the committee will come up with a better solution next year.
One thing I like about this show is that artist booths are setup down the middle of 5th avenue, back to back in quads. That means that every booth is a corner booth. What I don't like is that there is very little storage space in back of each booth... maybe two feet that has to be shared between the back to back booths. And, artists are prohibited from storing stuff on the sidewalks because of the many shops, galleries and restaurants on 5th Avenue. Luckily, we were opposite a vacant storefront and we did manage to store some stuff on the sidewalk during the show.
Sales on Saturday were meager. We had lots of people coming by and had lots of positive feedback for our work, but few customers. I'm not sure why it is, but the clientele that come to the art fair in Cambier park for Naples National in February is much different than the people who come to this art fair. We closed up the tent at 6pm with about $800 in sales. A big disappointment.
Sunday was much better because we sold two large canvas prints bringing our Sunday total to just over $1700. Total take for the show was $2500. At most shows we typically sell 15-20 small framed prints for $56 each. I bring lots of extra frames with me and pop new pictures in the frames as I sell them. This low cost alternative has been a great product for us but at this show we only sold four of them. There just were not many paying customers at this show.
Like most shows, sales were good for some, and not so good for others. We kind of came in the middle. Not a terrible show, but not a great one either. The 5am setup and the dismal parking situation will probably make us think twice about applying to this show again unless these problems are addressed next year.
We're from Saugatuck, Michigan and this was our fifth show of our Florida "tour." The others were ArtiGras in Jupiter, South Miami, Lake Wales and Bonita Springs. We grossed around $16K for the five shows. Sounds good, but when you factor in gas, lodging and meals and all the application and booth fees, our profits were kind of slim. I've got some ideas about some better shows that I hope to get into next year, so, we'll be back. Of course it is always up to the jury which shows we ultimately get into.
I've always relied on renting pipe and drapes for indoor shows from the show promoter – however I'm now considering purchasing my own. I do a couple smaller local shows which don’t offer rental options and sometimes the promoters at my larger shows chose a drape color that just doesn’t go with my product.
I realize there are several options out there – however can anyone recommend a quality product that won’t break the bank. I don’t mind spending a little more money for nice quality – however I don’t want to spend it unnecessarily either.
Any recommendations would be greatly appreciated!
My booth is typically 10' x 10', however occasionally I can only get a 10' x 8'.
We just finished our first show of the season, the three day, two shows combined event in Fairhope, Alabama. The festival ran March 20, 21, & 22 and show hours were Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. An awards dinner (great pasta food and deserts) was held Friday night from 6:30 to 7:30 and tickets are required that were exchanged for Mardi Gras beads to be served. One ticket was provided for each booth with the booth fee and an extra ticket costed $15, but they were not selling them to just anyone who wanted to attend since they denied my request on Friday afternoon when I inquired about bringing two collectors who came to see us there from out of town.
Fairhope is a quaint community full of southern charm nestled along the eastern shore of Mobile Bay, and it boasts having one of the oldest running events of this kind in the country--2015 was its 63rd year. We did the event sponsored by Eastern Shore Chamber of Commerce for our second time (2011 was the first), and we had a pretty good show worth writing home about since we won an award on Friday night and sold some original art on Saturday and Sunday along with some repros. I called my collector friends and boasted my win.
We didn't see the same number of repro buyers that we saw in 2011, and that's consistent with the current trend everywhere, but quite a number of artists around us were grumbling about sales figures being completely down. One artist with whom I'm well acquainted and who was doing the other show packed his trash and left on Saturday night. I think that the weather report fueled his fire to leave, but we got lucky with the weather this year since the heavy rain stopped before the show started on Sunday morning and the skies cleared for the duration. No part of the show got affected by rain this year, whereas last year the artists weren't so lucky and the show Director gave the option for everyone to leave on Saturday night without penalty, which everyone smartly did do. Anyway, back to the future...
Check-in started at 3:30 p.m. Thursday afternoon in the Chamber of Commerce office on Fairhope Ave. and lines were long, but that goes with the territory of a 200 artist show wherein nearly everyone decides to check-in at the same time. Set-up began at 6:00 p.m. later that evening and it can be hectic since the shows are held in the middle of the city streets. Police won't allow any vehicle to be parked or standing and will either make artists move out or have towed those unattended. Once all clear, you better have your engine running and be behind the wheel or you might ruin your flow. You all know the drill. I didn't have any problem whatsoever with unloading right into my booth and didn't see that others had trouble with set-up either. Usually we artists check-in, find our booth spot, and then begin discussing the flow with other artists around us. So this method proved golden once again.
What's especially cool about the C of C event layout is that booths are set up in blocks of four with a 10ft. space in between each quad, so everyone has a corner booth. And all of the booths are in the middle of the street. That doesn't leave room for any storage behind the booths, however. The other show, which is sponsored by Eastern Shore Art Center, sets its booths up side-by-side on opposite sides of the street with tents backed up along each curb. The shows are adjacent to each other, so the only way to tell you've moved from one show to the other is by noticing the booth layout.
I'm not going to do any heroic journalistic duty and research all the pertinent details about the Art Center sponsored event. If you want to read about that, hopefully someone who did it will comment about it. Otherwise, you'll have to seek the info on the Art Center's FACEBOOK PAGE HERE or their WEBSITE HERE.
Both shows combined total about 350 artists and that might have something to do with lackluster sales. But there were plenty of tourists afoot all three days. They were out in droves, and just about every five minutes one or more of them would walk by with a bag load of pussy willow for decorating with their homes. Got art? NOT! Got pussy willow? YOU BETCHA! Someone told me the vendor selling that foliage wasn't even in either of the two sanctioned shows. I dunno. I didn't investigate. It didn't stop the good natured art patrons from eventually finding me and lighting my fire.
Another cool feature about the Eastern Shore C of C event is that they provide refreshments all day, starting with large slow cookers full of cheese and shrimp grits, gourmet pastries, fruit, juice, and hot coffee on all three days behind the C of C office. Then throughout the day volunteers come by with rolling coolers and offer Coke Classic, other soft drinks, and cold water. We needed the support, too since the weather report was completely wrong for this weekend. It was a little warmer than it was supposed to be, but apparently not nearly as hot as it got on the folks in Orlando doing Winter Park.
The C of C show has a great video of the artists in the show on its website done by a local resident and volunteer. He came by my booth and interviewed me for the video. YIKES! But the show was slow changing the 2014 roster to 2015 since they did it the day of check-in. That's right, the day before the 2015 event. But they got it done before the new show, anyway.
Tim Peters (clay) won Best of Show, and when he heard his name called at the end of the presentation he briskly skipped his way from the back of the large civic center room to the stage. What personality! Other awards included the Chairman's Award, the Chamber Award, 10 Distinction, 5 Merit, 1 Juror's, and the one we got, the Eastern Shore Art Center Award of Excellence which is selected by the committee of the other show. When announced, our award was called the "Reciprocal Award" meaning that the committee from both shows choose one artist from the other show as their winner. So does that mean we should be doing the other show? I dunno? I don't think we will, though.
Hotel accommodations are plentiful in this area, but pricey. Get a room in late summer and keep checking for reduced rate opportunities. We stayed 12 miles from the show out on I-10 in the LaQuinta for nearly $100 per night.
One last note about our event. Our booth was directly in front of the little Hampton Inn in Fairhope (not your typical Hampton Inn, but a quaint inn a few steps off the street), and we got "adopted" by them. More than half the artists in the show got adopted by merchants in Fairhope, which meant the artists got to use private restrooms and partake in other benefits offered by the merchants. Hampton Inn gave us everything but a room, and it was a delightful gift of good fortune! WOOHOO!
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Lorton, Virginia
Workhouse Arts Center
Sat. 10am-6pm; Sun. 10am-5pm
100-140 Exhibitors
Deadline: April 24
The historic Workhouse Arts Center presents its first national arts festival this fall. More than 100 of the nation's best artists combined with over 60 Resident Artists will be exhibiting their work.
Location, location, location!
It's all about the Artists!
Why buyers will attend...
For more information and to apply online: Brett John Johnson, Director of Visual Arts:
Learn even more about this new festival on the podcast we did with three new fair directors: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/artfairs/2015/01/12/3-new-shows-for-2015-that-look-good |
After retiring from teaching art for 32 years i have had the chance to get back into the studio. Last year I did three shows. Two were inside and the one outdoor show provided a tent for "emerging artists". So this June will be the first outdoor show on my own. I purchased an eze up 10x10 tent last fall when eCanopy had some great sales. Used it Winterfair Columbus, an indoor show, worked great. But I have not yet purchased/made weights that I will need for the June show. This show is on parking lot surface so the tent can not be staked, just weights. I need some advice on weights to secure the tent. How many pounds? How to best tie to the tent? do I purchase the weights? Do I make something of my own? Would appreciate any advice.
August 8 & 9
Shelby Township, Michigan
This juried fair is limited to 100 artists and 30 Michigan based product selling businesses. With quality and variety in mind, art and fine crafts in clay, wood, painting, printing, drawing, fibers, metal, glass and other 2D and 3D mediums are being sought. A limited number of jewelers will be accepted.
All booths are outdoors on grass, measure approximately 15'x15', and many have shade trees. Some double booths are available.
- The jury fee is $10
- booth fees are $140 for artists and $60 for the MI Made area.
- Cash prizes are awarded to artists and fine crafters.
- friendly, helpful, organized staff
- easy load-in & load-out, Friday night set-up,
- plenty of free daytime & overnight parking close to exhibit areas
- overnight grounds security, and complimentary coffee and donuts each morning help to create a fun, friendly atmosphere.

Lots of prizes and big prize money was passed out this weekend at Winter Park. Congratulations to photographer Michael Cole, taking home the $10,000 top prize!
BEST OF SHOW ($10,000 Purchase Award) |
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Micheal Paul Cole |
Hannibal, MO |
Photography |
EDYTH BUSH CHARITABLE FOUNDATION |
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ART OF PHILANTHROPHY AWARD ($5,000 PURCHASE AWARD) |
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Marius Moore |
Gulfport, FL |
Photography |
MORSE MUSEUM AWARD FOR A DISTINGUISHED WORK OF ART($2500) |
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Robert Farrell |
Venice, FL |
Metal |
10 AWARDS OF EXCELLENCE ($2000) |
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David Figueroa |
Sanford, FL |
Sculpture |
Samantha Freeman |
Philadelphia, PA |
Jewelry |
Chia Haruta |
Hanover, MI |
Printmaking |
William Kidd |
Miramar, FL |
Clay |
Michael Madzo |
Medora, ND |
Mixed Media - 2D |
Clare Malloy |
Chicago, IL |
Drawings & Pastels |
Bernard Martin |
Winter Park, FL |
Painting |
Jonathan White |
South Portland, ME |
Clay |
R. Michael Wommack |
Langhorne, PA |
Drawings & Pastels |
Yu Zhou |
Yardley, PA |
Painting |
20 AWARDS OF DISTINCTION ($1000) |
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Pavlina Alea |
Miami, FL |
Painting |
Stephen Bach |
Orlando, FL |
Painting |
Bert Beirne |
Flowery Branch, GA |
Painting |
James Carter |
Southbury, CT |
Painting |
Megan Clark |
Raleigh, NC |
Jewelry |
Leah Dziewit |
Maple City, MI |
Fiber |
Randy Eckard |
Blue Hill, ME |
Watercolor |
Aaron Hequembourg |
Monticello, GA |
Mixed Media - 2D |
Cali Hobgood |
Urbana, IL |
Photography |
Michael Kahn & Mieko Kahn |
Greenbush, MI |
Clay |
James (Michael) Nemnich |
Indialantic, FL |
Drawings & Pastels |
Christian Nevin |
Apopka, FL |
Jewelry |
Steven Olszewski |
Pinckney, MI |
Sculpture |
Wesley Rasko |
Toronto, Ontaria |
Glass |
Mikel Robinson |
Asheville, NC |
Photography |
Suzy Scarborough |
Columbia, SC |
Mixed Media - 2D |
Maryann Schmidt |
Galway, NY |
Painting |
Thomas Spake |
Chattanooga, TN |
Glass |
Mark Sudduth |
Cleveland Hts., OH |
Glass |
Richard Wilson |
Greenville, NC |
Drawings & Pastels |
NAME |
CITY, STATE |
CATEGORY |
30 AWARDS OF MERIT LIST ($500) |
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Lisa Ashinoff |
Virginia Beach, VA |
Mixed Media - 2D |
Richard Auger |
Orlando, FL |
Photography |
James Barnes |
Woolwine, VA |
Wood |
Barbara Baron |
Miami Lakes, FL |
Painting |
Joseph Bradley |
Greenville, SC |
Painting |
Sandra Brewster |
Holiday, FL |
Glass |
Edson Campos |
Winter Park, FL |
Drawings & Pastels |
Maria Ciucur & Valentin Ciucur |
Dale City, VA |
Mixed Media - 2D |
Sana Doumet & Munir Doumet |
Clearwater, FL |
Jewelry |
Deborah DuPont |
Shiner, TX |
Mixed Media - 2D |
Jeff Eckert |
Tampa, FL |
Drawings & Pastels |
Virginia Fergus |
Atlanta, GA |
Watercolor |
Benjamin Frey |
Buena Vista, VA |
Mixed Media - 2D |
Clifton Henri |
Chicago, IL |
Photography |
Tim Hooper |
Nashville, TN |
Painting |
Farhana Hussain & Rod Hemming |
Buchanan, VA |
Watercolor |
William Kwamena-Poh |
Savannah, GA |
Watercolor |
Dana Melnick & David Melnick |
New York, NY |
Jewelry |
Amanda Murphy & John Murphy |
Streamwood, IL |
Photography |
Jillian Nickell |
Chicago, IL |
Printmaking |
Phillip Nolley |
Staunton, VA |
Glass |
Lawrence Packard |
Winter Haven, FL |
Drawings & Pastels |
Jim Parmentier & Shirl Parmentier |
Mars Hill, NC |
Clay |
Bruce Peeso |
Monson, MA |
Painting |
Gabriel Puyana |
Orlando, FL |
Sculpture |
David Russell |
Camden, SC |
Glass |
Paul Stevens |
Achilles, VA |
Photography |
Taman VanScoy |
Long Beach, CA |
Watercolor |
John Whipple |
Winter Park, FL |
Sculpture |
Warner Whitfield & Beatriz Kelemen |
Ocala, FL |
Glass |
June 6 & 7
Denver, Colorado
CHUN (Capitol Hill United Neighborhoods)
Civic Center Park
200 artists
Deadline: April 3
Application Fee: $35
With over 200,000 fair-goers and numerous exhibitors, vendors and volunteers, Civic Center Park becomes Colorado's third largest city over the weekend of the festival. For two days, the streets are closed and filled with music, juggling, wonderful arts and crafts, delicious food, families, friends and laughter as the people of Colorado celebrate this annual Rite of Summer!
The fair is famous for bringing together a diverse population to celebrate community and enjoy the start to the summer festival season.
The CHUN Capitol Hill People's Fair exists as a celebration of the diverse urbancommunity and benefits the community by returning to it the spirit, goodwill, and funds generated by the Fair.
The uniqueness and magic of CHUN'S Capitol Hill People's Fair is created by the careful blending of:
- Family fun and excitement
- The exhibition and sale of the worlds of local, national and international artisans and crafters
- A wide variety of live entertainment
- Quality foods and beverages
- The time and efforts of hundreds of volunteers
- the participation of non-profit organizations sharing ideas for the purpose of promoting awareness and understanding of the issues and concerns affecting the people from all walks of life
Learn more & apply: www.peoplesfair.com
Contact: Andrea Furness, andreafurness@chundenver.org
Phone: (303)830-1651
(Sponsored advertising)
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Discover the Finest Frames and Framing Supplies
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What does Frame Destination do best? Picture frames, of course! We have a picture frame to match your exact needs. Frame Destination specializes in all types of frames.
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So many shows are held on the streets that artists need to improvise. How about these choices?
1. PVC in white:
2. PVC in black:
3. PVC used in another way (pretty sneaky, isn't it?)
4. Concrete block w/rope:
5. Concrete in 5 gallon tubs:
7. Ye old mystery weight:
Most of these are artist made -- do you make your own. What is the best/safest way to attach these to the tents? Show us your version.
Beaches Museum & History Park, A1A & Beach Blvd.
Pablo Avenue is blocked off to traffic and lined with canopies and tents, each revealing its own little world of surprises! Musicians will entertain! Incredible edibles will be available-including some of Jacksonville's most popular Food Trucks!
- Reserved artist parking
- designated unloading and loading times
- booth sitters and assistance to handicapped artists are just some of the advantages offered to our artists
We are expecting 10,000 visitors in 2015. This is a fast growing art show and will be limited to 125 artists. Will expand to a two day in the future. Prizes awarded to top 5 artists. Ten percent of the total revenue generated from artists fees by Fine Art Appreciated is donated to the non-profit Beaches Museum & History Park which is dedicated to community outreach and educating the public.- It's a great one day show. One of the most organized events I have done. My sales were great and most of the other artists said the same thing.
- I can only hope for their continued success and maybe, they will expand into a two day event. I will definitely be back next year if they will have me.
- The location couldn't be better. Great visibility by two main arteries at the beach.
- What a great first year show. As an exhibiting artist I was impressed with the way the show was run, layout and the volunteers that always seemed to be present.
- this is a first year show and needs to get some legs under it, however as the public becomes more aware of the show it will improve.
Show promoters- Puleeeeze stop calling for "vendors" in your prospectuses and advertising. It drives me nuts!

small and large businesses.
I went to the Broad Ripple Art Fair Open Jury in Indianapolis in February. I got to be a "fly on the wall," watching five judges as they decided the fate of 539 artists that had applied for the show.
Because I am a jewelry artist who participates in juried art shows, and because the jury process has always been dark and mysterious to me, I decided to attend. It was a show to which I had applied, located an hour from my home, and an invitation had been emailed to all applicants.
When I got there they were finishing up in the photography category. It was in a conference room with a large screen in the front, where the digital images were projected. The five judges sat at two long tables in the front row. Each judge had a laptop in front of them, seeing the same images that were being projected on the large screen. As they viewed the images - all three plus a booth image, the narrator read out loud the artist statement. There is very little interaction between the judges. The images would be up for about 30-40 seconds, the judges would mark their scores, and go on to the next artist.
I found it fascinating to see the artist entries for photography. They ran the gamut from traditional to contemporary and realism to abstract. Seeing exactly what the judges saw, and in the short time given for each entry, I started to gain an appreciation for the challenge of judging an art show.
It's all subjective, after all.
After photography there was a break for lunch and then the jewelry category began. The host briefly showed images from each entry in the category. Then he went back through them, giving 30-40 seconds per artist, while the narrator read the artist statement. Since jewelry is my category, I was especially attentive to the images presented, the booth image, and what the artist said about his or her work. With 128 entries, the highest number of any category, it can all start looking the same after a while.
"We should score down every time the term 'unique' or 'one of a kind' is used!" one of the judges jokingly said during a break.
I have done juried art shows for over 20 years, but in the last few years I have totally upgraded and streamlined my booth. I got great direction and advice from fellow artists on Art Fair Insiders. I realized my booth was preventing me from getting accepted to certain shows. Now my booth is simple and uncluttered. So in viewing the jury images I was very interested in seeing other booth shots. What I saw ran the gamut from the cheap craft fair variety of booth to gorgeous hand crafted booths that are the perfect reflection of the jewelry sold. The ones that stood out were those that quite simply, in an aesthetically pleasing way, told customers non-verbally "great jewelry here". A consistent theme I saw was "less is more". No clutter, no signs, just tastefully designed displays with fabric drops and large images of jewelry pieces. The art reflects the booth and the booth reflects the art.
Another element I saw in viewing the artist entries was that the pieces were consistent. It wasn't necessarily similar in color or size, but harmonious one to the next. It was obvious they were made by the same artist and with the same intent. The ones that showed visual harmony between the pieces made the strongest statement and, I'm sure, earned the highest scores.
I felt that my jury images had the level of harmony from one to the next. I have worked hard to present consistent images of originality and craftsmanship that look harmonious. I also knew that my booth image complements the art and is streamlined and aesthetic. It was gratifying, after all that I have invested, to see my projected images on the big screen. I really thought I had a good shot at acceptance to the show.
So it was with a good dose of disappointment that I read the email two days later, thanking me for my entry but regretfully being rejected. This morning I received another email, delineating the scores given to each entry. Mine was a 2.8, out of a possible 7. Ouch! That's not even high enough to get on the wait list!
So, it was a great learning for me. I have gained a valuable insight into what was before a dark and nebulous process. What will I take from this?
- The jury process is largely subjective. It is subject to the opinion /eye /mood of the individual judges.
- Each year the judges are different and therefore the chance to be accepted or rejected change, but the process will still be subjective.
- As an artist it is within my power alone to create my best art, represented by great photographs, and described by the most succinct and impactful artist statement.
- As an artist it is not within my power to decide what the judges will accept or reject.
- This is a competition and as artists who compete we push to be the best we can be.
- If you don't compete you will never win.
Awards-Winner Art Partnership Award, Best Art Program, Best Artistic/Cultural Arts, Best Local Festival and Best Downtown Event in our area. Barefoot is a 501c3 nonprofit supporting arts education in our community through scholarships to students to help further their arts education. $58,000 of scholarship monies have been granted to students. You won't want to miss this event and make a difference while you're at it.
I don't know if any of you have encountered this email, but apparently it is being sent out to artists:
"Hello,
I am Page Jocelyn, i came across your items on the advert website and became interested in ordering from you.
i will like to inquire on the items you have for sale because i will be buying it for my new apartment.
I will like to see different pictures of the types of Items available and my method of payment is by Bank Cheque.
Hope to hear back from you soon.
Regards
Page Jocelyn"
After several emails back & forth my husband made it clear to her that we have a website that she can look at and choose the art that she would like to purchase. She decided on a painting and agreed to the price. We gave her the address that she should mail the payment to, and she said that she would. Then today we received an email from her saying that her financial administrator had sent us a check that was meant for someone else, by mistake, but that we shouldn't destroy it or send it back but deposit it. This put up a red flag for us, so we "googled" her name and a dialog came up indicating that there are several other aliases used for the same scheme. If you deposit the check, they would have your bank information. Of course we will not deposit it (if and when we receive it), but just wanted to know if anyone else has had this experience.

take place on the grounds of the Workhouse Arts Center, a 55 acre historical location and now Northern Virginia's Premier Center for the Visual and Performing Arts.
fine art and fine crafts. No commercial/mass produced/buy/sell allowed





